House Minority Leader John Boehner is whining about the length of the latest healthcare reform bill. It’s too long, he says. I agree it’s long, but to assume that all bills that long must, by definition, be “bad,” is not logical.

The truth of the matter, as Slate explains, is that lots of bills are long. The length of many of them is because pork is thrown in, in order to encourage members to vote for it. “Omnibus spending bills,” which are nearly an annual ritual in Congress, typically number well over 1,000 pages.

Sorry Mr Boehner, but the length of this bill has nothing to do with whether or not it’s good or bad.

Concentrating on one aspect of this bill while ignoring the rest is hypertrivia. Opposing the bill because Democrats authored it, is partisanism. Whining about yet another version of a healthcare bill — which has been worked on in Congress in one way or another since January, with none of it going anywhere — is hyperreacting. Appealing to people’s fears of “bureaucracy” … which is not evidenced in the number of pages in the bill, especially if those pages are more Congressional pork than anything else … is emotivism. Let’s grow up, Mr Boehner, and stop being maturity-deprived.

There’s an old saw among veteran Internauts like myself — famously coined by Mike Godwin and known therefore as Godwin’s Law — that in any discussion, comparisons to Nazis will inevitably be invoked. A further assumption about this is that, when it happens, it’s because the person or side making the comparison, has run out of ideas, meaning the discussion is over, and that person/group lost the argument. The reductio ad Hitlerum — to give the “appeal to Nazis” a more formal name — has become commonplace in American ideological discussion. It’s also a juvenile way to make one’s point … since it rarely has any meaning or relation to reality.

But [the debut of the RNC’s new Web site] got sidelined, or rather sideswiped, by some other Republican moves, that seemed to harken back to Hitler and the Nazis, yet again. In fact, Glenn Beck of Fox News, likened the feud with the White House as one that was akin to the Nazi movement that first came after the Jews?

To back up, this morning, the Republicans showed the ease with which they now put social media to work, when the National Republican Congressional Committee posted a message on Twitter directing readers to a parody video of a doctored Hitler bio-pic showing the Fuhrer on health care and thanking his lucky stars that he has Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader, on his side.

The Caucus blog entry mentions more such examples from the Right, including this:

Fox News’ Glenn Beck compared the White House decision to shun his network (remember when the President went on five Sunday talk shows and skipped Fox?) to the seeds of the Holocaust. Media Matters, the left’s watchdog against the right, captured it, with Mr. Beck saying:

When they’re done with Fox, and you decide to speak out on something. The old, “first they came for the Jews, and I wasn’t Jewish.” …

When they’re done with Fox and talk radio, do you really think they’re going to leave you alone if you want to ask a tough question? …

If you believe that, you should open up a history book, because you’ve missed the point of many brutal dictators. You missed the point on how they always start.

Mr Beck is making it seem that the White House’s feud with Fox News is a form of censorship. But it’s not, because the White House is not lifting so much as one pinky in the direction of shutting down Fox News. What it is doing is avoiding its correspondents. And they have every right to do so. They can choose who to talk to and who not to. (Because honestly, if the president were obligated to talk to everyone who wanted to talk to him, there wouldn’t be anywhere near enough hours in the day. It’s just not possible.)

Really, this is an example of fascification by the Right (i.e. declaring the Left to be Nazis in the making). It’s also emotivism (since images of Nazis is an emotional one.) If they justify it by pointing to when the Left accused Bush Jr of being a fascist, that would be an example of relativizing.

At any rate, that Glenn Beck and the rest of the crew over at Fox News is accusing Obama of being a Nazi, then you know he’s run out of useful and meaningful things to say.

But when push comes to shove, no one on the Right will condemn her … not even when she has overtly and unapologetically lied. In fact, conservative columnist George Will recently penned an article that pretty much makes her appear a saint of the Right. Not only does he whitewash her lies, he actually defends them:

Some of her supposed excesses are, however, not merely defensible, they are admirable. For example, her June 9 statement on the House floor in which she spoke of “gangster government” has been viewed on the Internet about 2 million times.

This is the danger with any ideology: It forces people who know better, to defend the indefensible, in order to promote the ideology itself — because no loyal ideologue is capable of admitting his/her ideology has any fault, not even within any of its partisans.

So George Will … who knows better than to defend liars … winds up defending a liar and the lies she told. All because he cannot admit the possibility that another Rightist might occasionally be wrong about something. Yes, it’s whiney and juvenile, and a guy George Will’s age is far too old to have any excuse for being so childish … but he is.